44 research outputs found

    Desmond Morton, When Your Number's Up: The Canadian Soldier in the First World War

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    Thermally excited tunneling from a metastable electronic state in a single-Cooper-pair transistor

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    International audienceMetastable electron traps and two-level systems are common in solid-state devices and lead to background charge movement and charge noise in single-electron and singleCooper-pair transistors. We present measurements of the real-time capture and escape of individual electrons in metastable trapped states at very low temperatures, leading to charge offsets close to 1e. The charge movement exhibits thermal excitation to a hysteretic tunneling transition. The temperature dependence and hysteresis can be explained by the coupling of a two-level system to a quasiparticle trap

    Thermal excitation of large charge offsets in a single-Cooper-pair transistor

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    International audienceCharge offsets and two-level fluctuators are common in single-electron transistors (SET) with a typical magnitude |∆Q| < 0.1e. We now present measurements in a 2e-periodic single-Cooper-pair transistor (SCPT) which exhibited hysteretic charge offsets close to 1e. The real-time capture and escape of individual electrons in metastable trapped states was measured at very low temperatures. This enabled the dynamics of the transitions to be investigated in detail, demonstrating thermal excitation to a hysteretic tunneling transition. We also show that, allowing for the hysteresis, the metastable states are in thermal equilibrium with each other. The observed temperature dependence and hysteresis can be explained by the coupling of a two-level fluctuator to a quasiparticle trap

    Contributions on the development of the reproductive system in Sternotherus odoratus (latreille)

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/47667/1/441_2004_Article_BF00572100.pd

    The British Army, information management and the First World War revolution in military affairs

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    Information Management (IM) – the systematic ordering, processing and channelling of information within organisations – forms a critical component of modern military command and control systems. As a subject of scholarly enquiry, however, the history of military IM has been relatively poorly served. Employing new and under-utilised archival sources, this article takes the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) of the First World War as its case study and assesses the extent to which its IM system contributed to the emergence of the modern battlefield in 1918. It argues that the demands of fighting a modern war resulted in a general, but not universal, improvement in the BEF’s IM techniques, which in turn laid the groundwork, albeit in embryonic form, for the IM systems of modern armies. KEY WORDS: British Army, Information Management, First World War, Revolution in Military Affairs, Adaptatio
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